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Enormous underwater mountains discovered off west coast of Americas

An ocean research vessel has just discovered four underwater mountains, the tallest almost 3 kilometres high, that might be hotspots of deep-sea life
The second of four seamounts recently discovered by the team on Schmidt Ocean Institute
One of the four recently discovered seamounts
Schmidt Ocean Institute

Four new underwater mountains have been discovered in the high seas off the west coast of South and Central America.

“The tallest is over one-and-a-half miles in height, and we didn’t really know it was there,” saysat the Schmidt Ocean Institute in California.

Virmani’s team on the exploration vesselcame across the seamounts in January, while navigating from Costa Rica to Chile for an unrelated expedition. The satellites they were using to plan the travel route spotted some gravity anomalies – areas in the ocean where the gravitational pull was a little stronger than usual because of the possible presence of excess mass.

Using a special kind of sonar, the researchers were able to work out the details: they identified four seamounts – underwater mountains – ranging in height from about 1591 to 2681 metres.

“I was thinking one, maybe two, but to find four is incredible,” says Virmani. “It does show how much we don’t know of what’s out there.”

Seamounts are hotspots of deep-sea biodiversity, with their slopes offering a home for coral reefs and a variety of marine animals that thrive on rocky surfaces rather than the gloopy sediment that blankets the deep seafloor, says at the University of Plymouth in the UK. “Seamounts have a really important role in the ocean,” she says. “They are often oases of life.”

“Every seamount has its own patterns of life,” says at the University of Southampton, UK. “Mapping those patterns is the next step.”

èƵs on the Schmidt Ocean Institute’s research vesselsFalkorandFalkor (too) have already discovered 29 seamounts. Data suggests there are between 45,000 and still to be found because most of the seafloor that lies beneath the open ocean remains unmapped. “The fact that we don’t have maps of our seafloor is crazy,” says Howell.

Topics: geology / Oceans